Mortgagee sales: Landlords feel pain

Mortgagee sales have hit record numbers, and landlords are the new victims.

Figures from the Terralink International land and property information company show about six forced sales a day nationally, or 44 a week, challenging statistics from realestate.co.nz, which has claimed that foreclosures are declining.

Terralink managing director Mike Donald said it was no longer struggling couples who were hurting but property investors, and he predicted this year could be New Zealand's worst for foreclosures.

"There has been a large increase in the number of mortgagee sales for individuals, considered to be property investors, who own multiple properties," said Mr Donald.

Terralink recorded 524 mortgagee sales from January to March, at least 100 more than in the same period last year and more than the previous record of 519 mortgagee sales in 2010 when New Zealand was at the height of the recession.

Mr Donald said the "big five" banks were increasingly forcing sales.

In 2009, he said, sales involving top-tier lenders amounted to 36 per cent of the total, but the figure this year was 55 per cent.

The number of forced sales in Northland rose 155 per cent, from 20 to 51, and Otago was up 153 per cent, from 15 to 38. Sale numbers in Hawkes Bay and Canterbury fell.

But Mr Donald said the overall picture remained bleak, and even record low interest rates were no help.

"If there's a silver lining anywhere in the figures, it's the drop in the proportion of individuals with a single property facing mortgagee sales, from 26 per cent in the first quarter of 2011 to 21 per cent this year," he said.

The president of the Auckland Property Investors Association, David Whitburn, said he knew of at least 40 landlords who had been bankrupted, and he did not see the situation improving.

"If these people were to go to a psychologist, they'd be classified as clinically depressed," he said.

"They've lost everything - their property investments, their homes and their self-esteem.

"I know far too many in this situation ... People like this have often had to get finance from second-tier lenders and are struggling to pay 11 to 14 per cent interest rates."

Relationships broke up and often family homes were lost, as landlords in retail or manufacturing had used their homes as collateral and banks were forcing sales to recover loans.